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    Women in Classical Ancient Greece (5th Century BC) held an inferior social position to men. Although they were prominent in the Greek Mythology (Goddess of Wisdom Athena‚ Goddess of the Hunt Artemis) and writing such as Sophocles’ Antigone (441 BC)‚ the average woman stayed at home‚ spinning and weaving and doing household chores. They never acted as hostesses when their husbands had parties and were seen in public only at the theater (tragic but not comic) and certain religious festivals. Women

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    to be spent on other things‚ such as helping those who were in need‚ in order to bring about honor and glory (Dover‚ 1984‚ 147). Spending money on extravagance goes against the Athenian ideals Pericles claimed that they upheld during the funeral oration. “We cultivate refinement without extravagance and knowledge without effeminacy; wealth we employ more for use than for show” (Thucydides‚ 2.40). Money was supposed to be spent to advance the family and the community and not to fulfill a person’s

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    restriction enzymes. Then a recipient plant or animal is selected‚ and the gene is inserted and incorporated into its genome through a vector such as agrobacterium‚ through a gene gun shooting an elemental particle covered in plasmid DNA‚ electro oration‚ or a virus. Once part of the recipient‚ the newly inserted gene becomes part of the genome of the recipient and is regulated in the same way as its other genes. For example‚ we can isolate a gene responsible for conferring drought tolerance‚ introduce

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    EUROPEAN HISTORY DBQ . 1. Explain the reasons for the adoption of a new calendar in revolutionary France and analyze reactions to it in the period 1789 to 1806. Historical Background: On November 24‚ 1793‚ the National Convention adopted a revolutionary calendar to replace the Gregorian calendar (established by the Roman Catholic Church in 1582). New Year’s Day was moved from January 1 to September 22‚ the founding date of the French Republic‚ and this date in 1792 marked the beginning

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    Biology Notes

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    Chi Zhang—“Simple Sentences” If you give me an inch‚ I’ll convert it to centimeters‚ feet‚ and fathoms. I’m a lover of laughter‚ a purveyor of puns‚ and an ally of academia. I look up to everything and down at nothing. My life is a tangled web of emotions‚ experiences‚ and externalities‚ a smorgasbord for the senses. I’m a quantitative sculpture: My height is five feet nine inches; my weight is 145 pounds; my shoe size is ten. I’m a qualitative figurine: my eyes are brown and oval; my hair

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    The True Tragic Hero In Shakespeare’s The Tragedy of Julius Caesar‚ Marcus Brutus and Julius Caesar are different characters‚ but somehow similar. Marcus Brutus is a Roman political leader‚ son-in-law of the Roman philosopher Marcus Porcius Cato the Younger‚ born in Rome‚ and educated in law. Julius Caesar is a Roman general and statesman‚ who laid the foundations of the Roman imperial system. Brutus’s honorable ideals leave him open for manipulation by Cassius‚ a man opposed to Caesar. He believes

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    Julius Caesar Final Exam

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    rather than noble. b. He is a cowardly soldier rather than a brave one. c. His death is not sad because he wanted to die. d. He feels guilty because he knows the murder of Caesar was wrong. 7. Which two words does Antony repeat in the funeral oration? a. ambitious and honorable b. Roman and freedom-loving c. benevolent and kind d. ambitious and tyrant 8. The first months of the joint reign of Antony‚ Lepidus‚ and young Octavius are marked by a. constant battles b. a return to democratic

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    Impact of the Renaissance

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    The impact of the Renaissance on Europe Jacob Burckhardt best describes the renaissance as the prototype of the modern world‚ for it was the period between the fourteenth and fifteenth century in Italy‚ when the base of modern civilisation was formed. It was mainly through the revival of ancient learning that new scientific values first began to overthrow traditional religious beliefs. People started to accept a new rational and objective approach to reality and most

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    For example‚ the famous Funeral Oration delivered by Pericles in 431 BCE as a tribute to those who died during the first year of Peloponnesian War makes no mention of gods or souls or an afterlife. Instead‚ Pericles emphasizes that those who were killed did so for the sake of Athens and

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    The historical value of speeches in Thucydides In writing his history as a whole‚ it is fair to say that Thucydides has always been praised for his relative historical accuracy‚ be that due to his actual presence at events‚ his use of eyewitness testimony or his noted checking of facts. In style Thucydides kept his narrative sections rather impersonal thereby allowing the story to unfold itself. However‚ to then lay bare what stood behind the narrative‚ the moral possibilities‚ the mistakes

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